Farhan Lalji wrote:And this thread is exactly why I try not to talk shit about other teams a la Alberta style.

Karma.

The last time I went out of my way to shit about another teams' fanbase was during the 00's..........and after watching the spectacular rise and spectacular fall of the WCE era, combined with improbable cup runs by both Calgary and Edmonton, I decided to discontinue my trolling efforts on other message boards.......let alone talk shit about other teams.

But that's just me.

A bunch of us on here have talked shit about Chicago and Boston and we were right.It worked. They sucked as much as we did in the playoffs, therefore we are glad we talked shit. But thats just us.

And continue with the trend recently of - beat the Canucks, and win a cup!

if LA is able to sneak a Cup here they will be the lowest seeded team to win it under the 16 team playoff format.

Jersey is presently the lowest seeded Cup winner (5th in the East in 1995). The Oil came close in 2006 as the 8th seeded Western Conference champion.

This will also make a good Cinderella story in the US, where they love an underdog. Consider the similarities with the 9-7 New York Giants Super Bowl win this year - big market, underachieving regular season team sneaks into playoffs, goaltender/quarterback plays freaking unbelievable, pulls off the upset against several favorites, wins the whole damn thing and become media darlings for a whole year.

Whatever the outcome, this scenario would go a long way to achieving Bettman's plan to increase hockey's popularity in non-traditional markets.

LA is playing well. I'm surprised that their hyper aggressive PK isn't getting burned hard but... add a Veznia goalie and trap defense and I guess you can do it.

Next year is going to be ugly. I think lots of teams are going to copy this style. Going to be brutal to watch. I know MG hates this type of play and favours a strong, offensive team but I don't think he can ignore the payoffs. I can't see him making a complete switch but maybe some type of hybrid or something.

wafflecombine wrote:LA is playing well. I'm surprised that their hyper aggressive PK isn't getting burned hard but... add a Veznia goalie and trap defense and I guess you can do it.

Next year is going to be ugly. I think lots of teams are going to copy this style. Going to be brutal to watch. I know MG hates this type of play and favours a strong, offensive team but I don't think he can ignore the payoffs. I can't see him making a complete switch but maybe some type of hybrid or something.

Team speed has always been the counter to the trap. Vancouver didn't have any whatsoever this past series and look at the results. I see much the same with the Blues. Lots of standing around watching and no energy. LA seems to be finishing hard on the forecheck deep in the opposition zone and eliminating that trailer option for the rush. In fact, they're finishing hard all over the ice and it's really taking its toll on teams. Speed AND size like Phoenix and LA is the new recipe for success i suppose....

wafflecombine wrote:LA is playing well. I'm surprised that their hyper aggressive PK isn't getting burned hard but... add a Veznia goalie and trap defense and I guess you can do it.

Next year is going to be ugly. I think lots of teams are going to copy this style. Going to be brutal to watch. I know MG hates this type of play and favours a strong, offensive team but I don't think he can ignore the payoffs. I can't see him making a complete switch but maybe some type of hybrid or something.

Team speed has always been the counter to the trap. Vancouver didn't have any whatsoever this past series and look at the results.

Everyone keeps going on about the Kings' lack of team speed. Are we sure about this, or are we just regurgitating old opinions? They've certainly got good speed in terms of getting to the puck and the first-available outlet pass. Vancouver is not a slow team. Is the loss completely attributable to being out-worked?

Puck wrote:Vancouver is not a slow team. Is the loss completely attributable to being out-worked?

I'll use this quote but not address the words specifically at you Puck.

We can, as a group, remove our finger from the panic button and back away from the cliff at this point in time.

The Kings are the real deal right now.

Clearly we lost to a team playing extremely well with many (most) of it's top players going 100% at the top of their game. As a matter of fact a bounce here and there and the series is much closer than 5 but regardless full value to LA, they were the better club.

The Canucks did not have the gear this year and lost. Credit them for winning the PT when their A game was obviously not in the bag.

Tweaks here and there and we will be in the mix next year.

I mentioned this several days ago but losing this series can be viewed from a postive perspective. Clearly the team needs to refuel, refocus, get healthy, straighten out a couple of issues and move forward. What better way than to lose first round, which not only provides the time for rest and healing but the motivation for the future?

Last edited by donlever on Wed May 02, 2012 9:25 am, edited 1 time in total.

Puck wrote:Vancouver is not a slow team. Is the loss completely attributable to being out-worked?

I'll use this quote but not address the words specifically at you Puck.

We can, as a group, remove our finger from the panic button and back away from the cliff at this point in time.

The Kings are the real deal right now.

Clearly we lost to a team playing extremely well with many (most) of it's top players going 100% at the top of their game. As a matter of fact a bounce here and there and the series is much closer than 5 but regardless full value to LA, they were the better club.

The Canucks did not have the gear this year and lost. Credit them for winning the PT when their A game was obviously not in the bag.

Tweaks here and there and we will be in the mix next year.

I mentioned this several days ago but losing this series can be viewed from a postive perspective. Clearly the team needs to refuel, refocus, get healthy, straighten out a couple of issues and move forward. What better way than to lose first round, which not only provides the time for rest and healing but the motivation for the future?

I really agree with this sentiment. Losing like we did last year carries a big price tag and I think it has finally been paid.